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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 03:03
by IndraD
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Major Salam Jasim (centre) (decorated with a cult following in Iraq), is leading the CTS armoured ground convoy. He has taken part in nearly every battle with IS, which overran Mosul in June 2014 before seizing much of northern and western Iraq. Maj Jasim was wounded in the city of Falluja, which Iraqi forces retook in June.

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A woman hugs a member of the Counter-Terrorism Service, also known as the Golden Division, after they recapture the last village on Mosul's eastern outskirts

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 06:04
by Singha
Another major attack on west aleppo beaten off

https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/is ... -disaster/

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 06:15
by Rishi Verma
^^ the hugging lady, her father-in-law (or husband), and the other beard, all look well fed, can't believe they were under isis occupation.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 09:00
by Singha
Tyrants need serfs to rule over and run the machinery of the economy ..just that serfs need to obey all orders. Else they might as well declare a caliphate deep in the sahara with 59 loyal camels as the only witness

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 09:22
by Austin
Singha wrote:Tyrants need serfs to rule over and run the machinery of the economy ..just that serfs need to obey all orders. Else they might as well declare a caliphate deep in the sahara with 59 loyal camels as the only witness
:rotfl: :rotfl:

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 10:21
by Austin
ISIS hitting Russian Attack Helicopter 04.11.2016


Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 10:39
by habal
dust storm has caused helicopter to malfunction and it is grounded. So ISIS went ahead and hit a grounded helicopter thinking it has peoples inside it. A rescue helicopter meanwhile retrieves those in grounded one.

" Russian helicopter performs emergency landing in Syria, comes under terrorist mortar fire "

A Russian military helicopter has performed in emergency landing in Syria and come under fire from terrorist mortars while on the ground Thursday, Russia’s Defense Ministry said. "The helicopter suffered damage, which prevented it from returning to base. The crew avoided injuries and was swiftly returned to Khmeimim airbase by a search and rescue helicopter,” it said in a statement. The ministry denied earlier claims by Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorists that Russian servicemen were killed in a mortar attack on a grounded aircraft.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 10:45
by Rammpal
"...Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorists..."

Islamic
State (formerly ISIS/ISIL)
Terrorist.

i.e.: Islamic State = Terrorist
Therefore, any nation/-land with that ending = Terrorist nation/land !!

Interesting psy-ops. :D

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 10:54
by habal
It is a translation of arabic daulat-e-islamiyya.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 11:22
by Austin
Yes the sky seems very dusty and windy almost zero visibility beyond few hundered meters .

Can Choppers and Fighters can fly in such dusy desert sky ? if it flies will it fall down with sand grains entering into the engine and damaging it ?

I read recently coilation had to stop bombing of Mousal for 2 days due to dusty windy condition

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 11:50
by Y. Kanan
What's the current Russian airpower dedicated to Syrian operations? Remember in April they pulled 1/3 of their combat planes out? I know since then the Russians brought in morecombat helicopters, but what kind of force did they finally end up with over there? As for the Kuznetsov, if I'm not mistaken it carries only 12 SU-33 and 4 Mig-29K, along with an undetermined # of Ka-27 helos (of various subtypes).

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 11:54
by Austin
https://www.rt.com/news/365299-assange- ... i-clinton/

In a 2014 email made public by Assange’s WikiLeaks last month, Hillary Clinton, who had served as secretary of state until the year before, urges John Podesta, then an advisor to Barack Obama, to “bring pressure” on Qatar and Saudi Arabia, “which are providing clandestine financial and logistic support to ISIL [Islamic State, IS, ISIS] and other radical Sunni groups.”

“I think this is the most significant email in the whole collection,” Assange, whose whistleblowing site released three tranches of Clinton-related emails over the past year, told Pilger in an exclusive interview, courtesy of Dartmouth Films.

“All serious analysts know, and even the US government has agreed, that some Saudi figures have been supporting ISIS and funding ISIS, but the dodge has always been that it is some “rogue” princes using their oil money to do whatever they like, but actually the government disapproves. But that email says that it is the government of Saudi Arabia, and the government of Qatar that have been funding ISIS.”

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 12:03
by Philip
The so-called "rebels" expect the West to save them just as Fuhrer Prabhakaran did during the last days of the LTTE.In similar fashion as the LTTE,the "rebels",western mercenaries,are using the civilians as human shields preventing them from escaping the horrors of the seige.Russia and the Syrian regime have given the civvies enough time to leave.Why has there been no UN/Western clamour for the trapped Aleppo civilians to escape using the safe corridors? The answer is simple.They care a hoot about the civvies and want huge human casualties to later accuse Putin and Assad of war crimes and justify sanctions,etc. against both regimes. But this is a double-edged sword which can be used also in the campiagn led by the West to liberate Mosul! Talk about people in glass houses.....

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/ ... ][b]Aleppo braces for Russian assault as rebels vow to defy ultimatum[/b]
Moscow says evacuation corridors are in place ahead of expected bombardment of east of Syrian city but rebels plan to stay
Rebel fighters from the Jaish al-Fatah brigades get into position at an entrance to Aleppo

Martin Chulov and Kareem Shaheen in Beirut and Patrick Wintour in London
Thursday 3 November 2016
Syrian rebel groups in east Aleppo are planning to defy an ultimatum from Vladimir Putin to abandon the city by Friday night, insisting that promised safe passages out of besieged areas do not exist and that an imminent Russian blitz will not change the course of the war.

As the Russian carrier group expected to take part in the attack moved into their final positions in the eastern Mediterranean, opposition fighters made fresh forays into west Aleppo, the latest in a series of attempts to break a four-year siege of the rebel -held east, which is surrounded by Iranian-backed militias that support the Syrian leader.

Moscow has said that corridors for fighters and civilians will remain open until sunset on Friday, ahead of what it has warned will be a bombardment that will level what remains of east Aleppo. As the deadline drew near, however, opposition groups said they had little to fear, and could not escape even if they wanted to.

Drone footage shows scale of destruction in eastern Aleppo
Washington and London increasingly believe that Russia will launch a devastating attack over the weekend or early next week, taking advantage of the US presidential election on 8 November and the fact that there is little military will to oppose Moscow as it takes an ever greater stake in securing the fate of Bashar al-Assad.

“In a normal situation people would be concerned by it,” said Wissam Zaraq, a teacher in the east of the city. “But right now they’re concerned about breaking the siege since the living situation and lack of supplies is so bad. I haven’t seen a single building that hasn’t been damaged in the bombardment, or a street that hasn’t been blocked by the collapse of buildings. People no longer pay attention to it.”

Residents of the city and members of opposition groups said the rebel attack on the regime-held west would prove more decisive in the fate of Aleppo than an intensified Russian bombardment. Spearheaded by jihadi groups that are dominant in parts of the Aleppo countryside, the push aims to open a supply line into the opposition-held district of Salaheddine, which could be used to bring in weapons, food and medicines.

Mohamed al-Ahmad, 29, a shopkeeper from Aleppo’s old city, said: “Russia is already bombing us. This doesn’t make us scared. It won’t be that different for us if they increase their attacks.” He said he and others would risk death or arrest if they left, but had nothing to fear from opposition groups.

“The situation is very difficult. There is no way to get out of Aleppo. Before the battle started, there was a way, but the problem is that you cross to a [Kurdish] area, and need to pay them to go to the Syrian regime-controlled area. If you have a security problem with the Syrian regime, you risk being arrested.”

Sharif al-Halabi, a spokesman for Fastaqim, one of the main rebel factions inside east Aleppo, said: “The Russians said they’re opening these corridors and the regime is advertising that it’s evacuating civilians, which is totally untrue and is simply a game they’re playing. There are no civilians who are leaving, and there aren’t even any corridors.

“We are people who are from Aleppo, of course we will not give it up and we reject entirely the idea of leaving Aleppo because we are in the right. Aleppo is our land and we defended it and continue to defend its civilians despite the bombardment and siege.”

Russian and Syrian officials have claimed that the remaining civilian population of east Aleppo are being prevented from leaving by militants. Rebels have rejected the claim, as well as an allegation that hospitals systematically targeted by Russian and Syrian jets were used to store weapons.

Diplomats in the region said attempts to bridge a divide between Russia and the US had failed. “What is at stake is whether a chance remains to forge a genuine settlement, which can reverse Syria’s state failure,” said one senior official. “The Russians don’t have the sophistication, or the intent to do the job properly. The opposition remains undaunted by the prospect that east Aleppo might fall, arguing it is better to fight on than agree a bad deal premised on a surrender.”

Saleh Saeed, 34, an Aleppo resident, said it was “honestly beneficial for civilians to be out”.

“We are surrounded and if there are less civilians, there will be more food for the fighters. Almost all of the people here can’t leave for the regime areas, many have a family member in the FSA [the opposition Free Syria Army] or are connected to the FSA, which makes them blacklisted from the regime side.”

Mohamed el-Sheikh, 29, a member of a rebel group, addressed claims of human shields. “In reality, there is no place, nothing like this,” he said. “[Assad] doesn’t allow the UN to bring aid, and when the UN enters, they bomb them.”

A doctor who had treated casualties in one of Aleppo’s three functioning hospitals – and who was himself recently injured in an airstrike – said claims that weapons were being stored in medical centres were false.

“They know the truth completely, but they are closing their eyes to it and lying and lying and lying until they are believed,” he said.

In London, Boris Johnson, the UK foreign secretary, appealed to Russia to hold back from its bombing campaign in east Aleppo, describing the state of the city as an “apocalyptic horror”.

He said the Russian attack had little to do with defeating terrorism and “everything to with preserving the blood-soaked Assad regime”.

He called on Russia not to veto a UN security council resolution that condemned the Syrian government for using chemical weapons against its own people.

“We are pressing for a UN resolution to hold accountable those who use such horrific weapons in defiance of the rules of war,” said Johnson.

“If Russia chooses once again to protect Assad by casting its veto then it will be shielding someone whose forces have been found guilty over and over again by a UN investigation, which the Kremlin itself supported, of killing their own people with poison gas.

“I say that vetoing such a resolution would be unconscionable.”

Additional reporting: Saalim Rizk[/quote]

PS":Boris Johnson got just one protestor to heed his clarion call to picket the Russian embassy in London! It shows how much the British people take him seriously."Every court must have its clown".

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 14:06
by Singha
one of the saudis who blew himself up in west aleppo yesterday
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CwVIZ7qWEAAPNpq.jpg
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CwVIbT0XAAETFKl.jpg

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 15:53
by Singha
not sure how true this is..

Iraqi PMU English ‏@pmu_english 11m11 minutes ago
#BREAKING - First stage of #Iraqi #PMU operations finished. #ISIS cut off from #Raqqa #Syria and over 1300KM² cleared of ISIS west of #Mosul

25 daesh, 5 truck bombs and 1 bus bomb either captured or destroyed yesterday so resistance almost non-existant in the western deserts...

Tal afar will likely be abandoned in a panicky rush to Raqqa.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 15:56
by Singha
so it looks like they cut the direct southern road ... the Tal afar town is where the green lettering in NW and is a loopy northern route but a better highway from maps.

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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 15:57
by Singha
2 more days and PMU will be knocking on the gate of Tal afar...they have crossed the areas where villages were scattered...its a bleak barren place now once they sneak behind that angular range of hills and make for tal afar airport - sure to be well stocked with abandoned ISIS IEDs and bomb trucks there.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:31
by Singha
so it begins...liberated areas of mosul in red
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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:37
by IndraD
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IS militants coming out of a hideout to clash with Sy army in Aleppo : pic taken on Thursday by Reuters

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:40
by IndraD
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Hundreds of fake limbs dumped outside Russian embassy in London to protest Aleppo attacks

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:41
by Singha
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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:42
by Singha
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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:57
by Singha
syrians need to use their brains and stop this passive defence of western aleppo...they are hanging on by a strip of territory that is about 2 miles wide at most. sooner or later the rebels will infiltrate and cut this again. they need to move out from both sides and close a pincer using their new armours etc. enough men and materials are now in aleppo...capture empty land and build defensive earth berms and ditches there to stop these daily vbied attacks and infiltration

they are waiting and waiting forever

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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 16:58
by Singha
only place in syria where proper berms and ditches are made is deir azzor ... because their lives depend on it daily....someone is being pretty lax about securing aleppo from all sides.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:10
by Austin

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:34
by Singha
total lack of initiative by the syrians despite a huge buildup. they are skating on very thin ice. perhaps someone has convinced them of the zhukov doctrine of letting the enemy tire themselves and be on verge of a breakthrough before unleashing a bagration type shock army in a counter putsch but they do not exactly have 100 divisions of winter trained troops like the Rodina.

for starters a Pincer attack from the south and north could perhaps trap these 5000 faithfuls camped at the gates and wanting to break in. hammer and anvil.

here we have hapless west aleppo civilians forced to scurry for cover because the jihadis have been allowed to get in so close to mortar and hell cannon them mercilessly

https://twitter.com/MuradGazdiev/status ... 6948705280

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:36
by Singha
Haidar Sumeri ‏@IraqiSecurity 13h13 hours ago
Unconfirmed reports of an imminent Turkish invasion of #Iraq. Iraqi armed forces and the Hashd Al-Sha'abi are on high alert.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:40
by Singha
barbers doing brisk trade as the mandatory beard policy is gone

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Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:43
by Singha

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 18:45
by Singha
another vbied attack - fortunately no one killed but many knocked down

https://twitter.com/IraqiSecurity/statu ... 3098710016

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:21
by Singha
dress and kit of burhan wani and his friend closely matches the aleppo jihadis

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CuLjnUwUIAAaj5h.jpg

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:36
by Singha
маяковский ‏@moscow_ghost
How 300 #AlQaeda headhunters recruited 5,000 underage fighters in liberated #Syria this year, to sustain the war

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:37
by Singha
Al-Masdar News ‏@TheArabSource
No Russian air presence in #Aleppo despite massive jihadist attack https://aml.ink/UzmjI #Russia #Syria

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:38
by Singha
Unable to understand russi tactics or intentions here

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:50
by Singha
Ali raza ‏@alilaeq110
@EjmAlrai what are the chances of Iraqis attacking isis in Syria? After they're done with isis in Mosul?/Iraq
Elijah J. Magnier
Elijah J. Magnier – ‏@EjmAlrai

None 4now. Iraqis need to free al-Qaim first to support Deir-ezzour after. That means spring/Summer 2017, counting positively. @alilaeq110

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:51
by Singha
Al qaim in iraq and al bukamal on syrian side are the gateway to deir azzour

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 19:52
by Singha
Tal afar is a testcase..if it falls easily will be proven isis has no ability to defend minor places in depth....things will roll to raqqa quicker. SDf spokesman has said today they are getting ready and turkey will not be part of it

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 20:12
by IndraD
Singha sir pls do give a caption to the pics as well ; what are they re! eg that explosion pic, who are these Men on motorcycle etc.

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 20:50
by Singha
They are jaish al fateh bike squad. Explosion is vbied.

I think most buildings there have underground parking lots. jihadis use it to hide from artillery strikes, sleep and eat and as vehicle workshops and ammo storage. A lot of videos have vbied and bmp being prepped in such underground areas with ramps leading up

Re: Levant crisis - III

Posted: 04 Nov 2016 20:54
by Singha
Tip of spear.

Inghimasi
The inghimasi ( Arabic : انغماسي , the "infiltrated") is a fighter jihadist equipped with a light weapon and an explosive belt . During fighting or attacks, inghimasi, often in the front line, first used his weapon and operates his belt last resort. It differs from the suicide bomber because it can come back alive an operation. This term appears to 2013 , during the Syrian civil war and the second Iraqi civil war , he was employed by the jihadists of the Islamic State and the Front al-Nosra [ 1 ] , [ 2 ] , [ 3 ] , [ 4 ] .